In tarot everything can mean something. Most readers understand that the suits all have a specific energy. Likewise, so do the numbers. If you are like me, some numbers are easier to get than others. Fours have always been easy for me. A four-legged chair is more stable than a three-legged stool. Stability, security, and safety are associated with the number four. It's negative extreme is stagnation.

In our fast-paced world, we are more apt to keep the screen moving, keep scrolling, keep breathing in more and more information than we are to pause, to dive deeply, to process.

Because of this, it might be good to consider the positive advice that we can find in the 4s.

​All the images used are from the Llewellyn's Classic Tarot, illustrated by Eugene Smith.

It is featured in a kit with my new book, Your Tarot Your Way. Clicking on the image will take you to Amazon via my affiliate link.

The number four is not just about stability or stagnation. It is also about stopping the flow of energy. Energy stopped for too long leads to stagnation. But in a world where energy is encouraged to move at a frenetic rate, I don't think we will hurt anything by slowing down a little. In fact, just the opposite. There are great benefits to slowing down.

4 of Wands

We have access to so much information on how to be more productive each day and how to achieve more of our goals than ever before. Getting things done and manifesting our ideas is so fulfilling. This is what the suit of Wands is all about: our projects and our passions.

While we are getting more things done than ever before, it would seem that we would be celebrating more than ever. Or are we so focus on the next task that we forget to celebrate our achievements?

When the energy of Wands stands still for a moment, look at the beautiful experience it creates. Make sure you stop to reward yourself or a loved for a job well done.

4 of Cups

When readers see this card, the first reaction is usually: oh, you are bored and dissatisfied with what you have and you should take the gift that is right under your nose. In a reading, sure, that's a great way to interpret this card.

As a life lesson, we might see it differently. Instead of grabbing your favorite pacifier, pause and acknowledge your emotions. Name them without judgment. Allow yourself to feel them.

When we have things we don't want to deal with, it is tempting to look for distractions to avoid processing our less pleasurable emotions. Ignoring them means they stick around and fester, and that's even less pleasurable.

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4 of Swords

Our phones are wonderful, aren't they? I love mine a lot, particularly listening to podcasts and audiobooks. Since I am not on social media, this is a major way I feed my need to take in information. Others may use news feeds, Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, etc.

Having so much information in our pockets 24/7 is such a gift. It can also be a huge burden. We have to consumer so much media (regular or social) just to keep up.

We don't always remember to allow time to digest what we've consumed. Take a lesson from this card and give yourself time to reflect on what you've read or watched. Roll it around in your head, explore all the implications, or even journal about it.

4 of Pentacles

This card is almost always seen as negative, as a hoarder or selfish person. A positive aspect is "saving for a rainy day."

It's true that the energy of the Pentacles can be prone to stagnation. We should remember this and remember that very often our non-physical experiences can energetically lodge in our bodies. It can be very illuminating to pause and scan your body. You might find that you're holding onto an emotional experience from yesterday or harboring anxiety about a meeting tomorrow.

It's easy to ignore the small (or even large) messages from the body. Take an aspirin or whatever. Instead, honor the messages and deal with the cause.

A Blessing from the Fours

May you take the time to celebrate your achievements.
May you acknowledge and honor your emotions.
May you allow your mind time to integrate ideas.
May you listen to the wisdom of your body.

Images: The Four of Swords and Ace of Wands from the Everyday Witch Tarot by Deborah Blake and Elizabeth Alba

A friend and I always start our workweek off by getting together for coffee each Monday morning. We call it our office hour, even though we talk about both personal and work-related items. This Monday, which happened to be the first day of spring, found us both full of energy, ideas spilling from us, revelations and creativity flowing all around until we felt like children playing in a fountain.​The awakening of spring always takes me by surprise. By now you’d think I’d be prepared, knowing how my soul follows the cycle of the year. But then, maybe that’s part of the magic, that shocking and pleasant jolt of waking up.

As our long Minnesota winters progress and linger, I grow increasingly restive. It is as if, metaphorically and sometimes literally, a heavy quilt covers me, movement hampered by the weight of the season. The lethargy is hard to bear and harder to fight. But fight it, I do, at least some of the time. “Do something,” I tell myself. Aside from the mundane work that needs doing, though, not a lot happens. That’s the way it feels, anyhow.

The truth is that a lot is happening, but I just can’t see it. The soul work of winter takes place below the surface. Like many people with pagan leanings, the Wheel of the Year shapes how I view the world, how I trace the rhythms of my soul. In the fall, the fruits of our soul labors are harvested and the soul garden is put to bed. Putting a garden to bed means harvesting, cutting down or pulling out the remains of the season’s spent plants, and covering the ground with mulch. During the winter, under the mulch, the remains of garden decompose and the soil is nourished. It is really very magical and yet because it is unseen and mostly unfelt, we easily mistake this period for stagnation. At least I do.

During my winter Monday office hours with my friend, I felt like each week I had nothing interesting to say, no life-changing revelations, no spectacular creativity. Especially as winter drags on, I become more and more impatient with myself, accusing myself of laziness, cursing my lack of energy, mourning my lost ambition.

How I feel in spring.

​And then, like magic, this Monday my soul showed signs of new life, like the crocuses bravely blossoming in the still cold soil, and I felt alive, awake, excited. Although a little ashamed and embarrassed by forgetting the hard, important, invisible work of winter, I was grateful to be reminded of it by the evidence of new life.

Perhaps next winter I will remember that even though things feel stagnant, they are not, and I will honor this valuable time and be gentler with myself. It is such a surprising miracle to wake up feeling transformed when all the while I thought nothing was happening.

​May you recognize the gifts of your soul’s winter’s work.May you be rich and ripe and ready to receive new seeds and nourish new life.May you honor all times and seasons, accepting their gifts with gratitude.

Kickstarter Opportunity

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